When Maine decided to enact an energy bill that would
require 10 percent of its generation sources to come from
renewable energy by 2017, it knew the task would be
challenging. To get there, it will try and take advantage
of one form of green energy that gets little attention:
ocean energy.
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Ken Silverstein
EnergyBiz Insider
Editor-in-Chief |
In fact, the Electric Power Research Institute, or
EPRI, has said that ocean power in Maine has the potential
to produce electricity that does not emit harmful
pollutants at a cost that is on par with wind and solar
energy. And ocean waves may be more reliable than other
green energy forms, largely because the tides are
constant.
The potential is obvious: As the world's largest solar
collectors, the oceans generate thermal energy. Now the
job before scientists and engineers is to figure out how
to capture this energy and produce electricity. Sea water
is 832 times as dense as air, providing a six mile per
hour ocean current with more kinetic energy than a 217
mile per hour wind, say experts. To bring the idea into
the mainstream, however, scientists and engineers must
still show that their work can be done on a large-scale
basis.
"Ocean wave energy enables more straightforward and
reliable integration into the electric utility grid to
provide reliable power," says Annette von Jouanne,
engineering professor at Oregon State University, in a
release that notes the school is testing the viability of
ocean power. "Wave energy also offers much higher energy
densities, enabling devices to extract more power from a
smaller volume at lower costs."
The World Energy Council says that ocean power could
provide as much as 10 percent of the world's electrical
demand. The catch: The technologies to allow that are not
yet ready for prime time. That said, the United States
provides some possibilities.
The shores off the California Coast and Washington
State could be sites for ocean power plants. Seattle-based
Aqua Energy wants to build a one megawatt facility near
Washington State that forces water through a buoy that
spins a turbine generator to create power. That so-called
tidal fence uses turnstiles that spin with tidal currents.
Florida and other areas of the Gulf of Mexico are also
suitable for such development.
In the case of Maine, it has filed two preliminary
permits with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
Experts say that ocean power could be generated for no
more than 6.5 cents a kilowatt hour. While more expensive
than coal resources, the chief advantage would be the fact
that such plants would emit no greenhouse gas emissions.
"Harnessing the energy from Maine's big tides in an
environmentally friendly manner will reduce our dependence
on imported fossil fuels and will create jobs in the
state," says Beth Nagusky, director of Maine's Office of
Energy Independence, in a previously published news
report.
Pilot Projects
Altogether, the U.S. Department of Energy says that
there are only a few hundred land-based sites in the
tropics where deep-ocean water is close enough to shore to
make ocean energy feasible. At the same time, it says
ocean energy does present environmental challenges. Tidal
power plants can impede sea life migration and can effect
local ecosystems. In Oregon, for example, they are
studying the potential affect on sea birds and marine life
from electromagnetic fields and undersea cables.
Newer technologies, however, are less problematic and
don't block migratory paths. The optimal solution is
careful site selection. That involves appropriate spacing
of the plants and choosing sites that preserve scenic
shorelines.
To make ocean energy economics work, it will need to be
done on a large-scale basis. France's La Rance station is
the only industrial-sized tidal power station -- gates and
turbines are installed along dams -- in the world. The
plant, which went on line in 1966, produces 240 MW. The
Annapolis Royal Station in Nova Scotia, Canada, meanwhile,
generates about 20 MW of power using tidal power.
The United Kingdom could also be a potential spot for
ocean power. A proposed off-shore project near Lynmouth
would be capable of producing 300 kW of electricity and
will become a testing ground for other tidal turbines.
Indeed, the U.K. has announced it could host its first
large-scale ocean power project -- one that could be
operational within a few years. That announcement
coincides with others. South Korea, for example, is
working on a large tidal and wave power plant that would
be able to generate 254 megawatts.
"The potential of (ocean power) is great," says Joseph
Huang, a senior scientist for the National Oceanic
Atmospheric Administration, in a news report filed by
freelance writer Carl Hoffman. "The oceans are the biggest
solar collector on Earth, and there's enough energy in
them to supply a thousand times the world's needs. If you
want to depend on nature, the oceans are the only energy
source big enough to tap."
While the technologies to produce ocean energy exist,
they have a long way to go. But, the U.S. Energy
Department does have a program to assist developers and it
is funding one such ocean energy project 11 miles off the
Florida coast that would produce 120 kW. Meantime, Blue
Energy of Canada has developed six prototypes that produce
up to 100 kilowatts. The tidal fence, which acts like
underwater windmills, allows water and marine life to
safely flow through.
It's clear that renewable energy will play a greater
role in bringing electric power to people all over the
world. Wind and solar energy are the most advanced forms
of green energy. But, ocean power has the greatest
potential. The key now is to get a few such facilities up
and running to demonstrate its viability.
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visit: http://www.energycentral.com
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